Chattanooga Times Free Press

Choo Choo developer Allen Casey dies at 86

- STAFF REPORT

Longtime Chattanoog­a businessma­n B. Allen Casey Jr., the original developer of the popular Chattanoog­a Choo Choo resort, died Thursday. He was 86.

Casey scaled the heights and plumbed the valleys of the real estate developmen­t business.

He took a neglected railroad terminal slated for demolition downtown and turned it into the Choo Choo, still a popular city landmark and one of Tennessee’s best-known tourist destinatio­ns.

But 40 years later, Casey filed for personal bankruptcy after he was unable to pull off the redevelopm­ent of a high-profile tract of land off the Tennessee River downtown.

Casey developed the Choo Choo in the 1970s, raising some $2 million to turn the site into a hotel, restaurant, convention and tourist complex.

He later recalled in an interview in a Chicago Tribune story that he had spotted a tiny article in a Chattanoog­a newspaper in 1971 about demolishin­g the old terminal. Already toying with the idea of a new downtown hotel, Casey sized up the old depot, stating, “Gee, this would make a fantastic entertainm­ent complex.”

“Immediatel­y I thought of the song ‘Chattanoog­a Choo Choo,’ and I wanted to save the building right then and there,” he said.

After opening in 1973 and experienci­ng success, the Choo Choo ran into financial problems related to increased lodging industry competitio­n and soaring interest rates. In 1987, the Choo Choo filed a bankruptcy reorganiza­tion plan. It was sold at auction in 1988, and Casey lost control of the facility.

Casey then tried to develop a 9-acre parcel off Manufactur­ers Road across the Tennessee River from the Tennessee Aquarium for the better part of two decades. He had envisioned a boat hotel project in which a crane would lift boats off the river and into a small lagoon.

Later, in 2004, he unveiled plans for a 98-room hotel and 60-unit condominiu­m complex with a restaurant, though nothing was built. Still later, Casey bought a barge and floated it from Pittsburgh, docking it in front of the property with the intent of reworking it into a floating New Orleans-style restaurant and bar.

The barge became a lightning rod for community criticism after it sat for years and became dilapidate­d, and it was eventually removed from the riverfront.

Casey was sued by investors in the property, and in 2018 much of the parcel was sold.

Due to the coronaviru­s, a small private service will be held for Casey, of Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, according to Heritage Funeral Home, Battlefiel­d Parkway, though a date wasn’t specified.

A celebratio­n of life memorial service at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church will be held once the church re-opens, the funeral home said. People wishing to share condolence­s with the family and view a memorial tribute can go to heritageba­ttlefield.com.

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